*No smell? May be brain disorder!*

 If you can't recognise certain smells, you might be in line for
Alzheimer's, *Parkinson's
disease*<http://search.live.com/results.aspx?q=Parkinson%27s+disease&mkt=en-IN&form=QBRE&go.x=14&go.y=16>,
obsessive-compulsive disorder or schizophrenia, Australian research
suggests.

Researchers at *Melbourne
University*<http://search.live.com/results.aspx?q=Melbourne+University&mkt=en-IN&form=QBRE&go.x=16&go.y=13>came
up with a set of 40 scratch-and-sniff cards and asked people to
identify different aromas like oranges, coffee, petrol and roses.

More than half of those who had trouble sorting out the smells went on to
develop a brain disorder. Christos Pantelis told national broadcaster ABC
that olfactory ability provided information about brain structure and
function.

"Mental illness can arrest the full maturation of the frontal lobe, while
degenerative illness can damage it," Pantelis said. "This area of the brain
is used to analyse and identify smells, so an abnormal sense of smell may
indicate problems in this "thinking' area of the brain."


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